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Contrasting Drought Propagation Into the Terrestrial Water Cycle Between Dry and Wet Regions.

Authors :
Li, Wantong
Reichstein, Markus
O, Sungmin
May, Carla
Destouni, Georgia
Migliavacca, Mirco
Kraft, Basil
Weber, Ulrich
Orth, Rene
Source :
Earth's Future; Jul2023, Vol. 11 Issue 7, p1-17, 17p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Drought's intensity and duration have increased in many regions over the last decades. However, the propagation of drought‐induced water deficits through the terrestrial water cycle is not fully understood at a global scale. Here we study responses of monthly evaporation (ET) and runoff to soil moisture droughts occurring between 2001 and 2015 using independent gridded datasets based on machine learning‐assisted upscaling of satellite and in‐situ observations. We find that runoff and ET show generally contrasting drought responses across climate regimes. In wet regions, runoff is strongly reduced while ET is decoupled from soil moisture decreases and enhanced by sunny and warm weather typically accompanying soil moisture droughts. In drier regions, ET is reduced during droughts due to vegetation water stress, while runoff is largely unchanged as precipitation deficits are typically low in these regions and ET decreases are buffering runoff reductions. While these water flux drought responses are controlled by the large‐scale climate regimes, they are additionally modulated by local vegetation characteristics. Land surface models capture the observed water cycle responses to drought in the case of runoff, but not for ET where the ET deficit (surplus) is overestimated (underestimated), related to a misrepresentation of the general soil moisture‐evaporation interplay. In summary, our study illustrates how the joint analysis of machine learning‐enhanced Earth observations can advance the understanding of global eco‐hydrological processes, as well as the validation of land surface models. Key Points: Contrasting drought response for both evaporation (ET) and runoff between wet and dry regionsET increases during drought in tree‐covered and wet regions, which in turn enhances runoff deficitsLand surface models capture runoff deficits but overestimate ET deficits due to misrepresented soil moisture‐evaporation interplay [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23284277
Volume :
11
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Earth's Future
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
167371446
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EF003441